In the Footsteps of the Perfect Teacher

Allah says in the Quran:

It is He who has sent among the unlettered a Messenger from themselves reciting to them His verses and purifying them and teaching them the Book and wisdom although they were before in clear error”. [Surah Al Jumu’ah, 62:2]

Allah sent Rasulullah (SAW) to do four things:

  1. Recite the verses of the Quran
  2. Teach the Quran
  3. Teach the Wisdom (sunnah)
  4. Purify his followers.

The Prophet (SAW) nurtured his companions and taught them in such a way that the whole of Arabia drastically changed in a matter of 23 years. He had six amazing qualities of teaching that inshaAllah we can implement and follow as teachers, parents, siblings and any other roles we have in our communities.

Mu’awiyah ibn Al-Hakam said, “I have never seen a teacher before him (Prophet (SAW) or after him better in teaching than he.”

The attributes of a good teacher:

  1. Being concerned about the goodness for students: In surah At-Tawbah, Allah says, in the translation of ayah 128, “There has certainly come to you a Messenger from among yourselves. Grievous to him is what you suffer; [he is] concerned over you and to the believers is kind and merciful.”
    Rasulullah (SAW) also advised Abu Dhar (RA), “I see that you are weak, and I love for you like I love for myself, so if someone gives you a position of leadership, don’t take it”.
  2. Kindness: Rasulullah (SAW) said, “Allah is Kind (Rafeeq) and He loves kindness, and confers upon kindness which He does not confer upon severity, and does not confer upon any thing besides it (kindness).” [Muslim]
    We see his kindness throughout his life (SAW), when he would pass by children in the street he would play with them–unlike nowadays, where people think it is righteousness to never smile. Anas ibn Malik (RA) narrated that whenever the Prophet (SAW) would pass by children he would smile fondly and greet them. [Bukhari and Muslim].
    Anas also narrated, “I served him for ten years, and he never said “uff” (an expression of disgust) to me. He never said, ‘why did you do that?’ for something I had done, nor did he ever say ‘why did you not do such and such’ for something I had not done.” [Bukhari and Muslim].
  3. Hikmah (wisdom): Hikmah is defined as saying the right thing at the right time to the right people in the right manner. The Prophet (SAW)  said, “Help your brother, whether he is an oppressor or is oppressed.” A man inquired: “O Messenger of Allah! I help him when he is oppressed, but how can I help him when he is an oppressor?” He (SAW) said, “You can keep him from committing oppression. That will be your help to him.” [Bukhari].
    Another example is the story of the bedoin who urinated in the masjid. SubhanAllah, while all of the sahaba ran to admonition him and beat him, the Prophet (SAW) simply said, “Leave him alone and pour a bucket of water over it. You have been sent to make things easy and not to make them difficult.” [Bukhari]
  4. Humilty and humbleness: Abu Rifa’a (RA) narrated that, “I came towards the Prophet (SAW) while he was giving the khutba. I said ‘O Messenger of Allah, an estranged man has come asking about his religion, he does not know what his religion is.’ The Messenger of Allah came towards me and left his khutba until he reached me, and was brought a chair, I thought the legs were made of iron. The Prophet sat on it and started teaching me from what Allah had taught him. Then he returned to his khutba and completed it.” [Bukhari]
  5. Openness – Saying “I don’t know” if you don’t know the answer: Rasulullah (SAW) would only answer a question if Quran had been revealed answering it, or he would wait for revelation. Once, Jaabir ibn Abdillah (RA) came and asked the Prophet (SAW) about inheritance, and Rasulullah (SAW) stayed quiet until Allah (SWT) revealed the ayah in Surah an-Nisaa.
  6. Speaking slowly: ‘Aishah (RA) reported that the Prophet (SAW) did not summarize his speech, and he spoke in such a way that if one were to count his words, they could be counted. [Bukhari] Anas ibn Malik also reported that Rasulullah (SAW) would repeat his words three times.

These are only a few of the qualities of Rasulullah (SAW) as a teacher, indeed in him we have an excellent pattern– as Allah Himself says:

“There has certainly been for you in the Messenger of Allah an excellent pattern for anyone whose hope is in Allah and the Last Day and [who] remembers Allah often.” [Surah Al Ahzab, 33:21]

Source: http://islamcalling.wordpress.com/2011/04/01/prophet-muhammad-the-perfect-teacher/

About navedz

Check Also

What Is The Difference Between The Needy & The Poor?

Question: Who is the Miskin (needy) who is a recipient of Zakah and what is …